Category: Police

  • You see this cat is a baad mother–

    What would you do when you get shot? Get a Slurpy? Shut your mouth!

    From today’s Baltimore Sun.

    Can you dig it?

    Man gets shot, takes cab to convenience store
    He hailed taxi, went to S. Baltimore 7-Eleven

    By Gus G. Sentementes

    Sun reporter

    8:33 AM EST, March 5, 2008

    A man who was shot several times in South Baltimore last night didn’t call an ambulance, but instead hailed a cab whose driver took him several blocks to a 7-Eleven store, authorities said.

    The shooting occurred shortly before 8 p.m. when police said a 32-year-old man was wounded on the first block of E. Heath St.

    Suffering from injuries to his neck, arm and body, police said the man jumped into a nearby taxi and rode a half mile to the convenience store on South Hanover and Hamburg streets.

    Police said the man went inside the 7-Eleven and that someone inside called for an ambulance. The victim was taken to Maryland Shock Trauma Center and treated for non-life-threatening injuries, according to police.

    Police said they had made no arrests and did not know whether the man had paid his cab fare. The name of the taxi company was not immediately available.

    Undoubtedly, he’s a complicated man.

    [Basic crime stories are usually so dry. I love that fact that Gus Sentementes, a well-seasons crime reporter (who has never called me, by the way), asked the tough question, “did he pay his fare?!”]

  • Free copy of Cop in the Hood!*…

    *…for anybody I policed with. Or if you were in the academy class of 99-5. Odds are I don’t have your contact information, so email me at pmoskos@jjay.cuny.edu. I’d certainly prefer it if you bought your own copy. I don’t get my own book for free. I have to buy it from Amazon.com just like everybody else. But if you wouldn’t buy it otherwise, get in touch with me and I’ll be happy to send you a free copy.

  • War on Drugs!

    A 13-year-old girl in Tucson was strip-searched by school officials who suspected her of possessing ibuprofen (prescription-strength Advil). She didn’t have any.

    You can read her affidavit here.

  • Shocks the conscience

    One-in-a-hundred adult Americans is behind bars. This figure has shocked some people since it made the headlines the other day.

    The Timesquoted a Professor Cassell as saying that our rate of imprisonment has “very tangible benefits: lower crime rates.” But this isn’t true. The prison rate has been increasing since 1970, so why didn’t crime go down until the mid 1990s? Why should prison get credit for the crime drop of the past 10 years but the not the crime rise for the previous 20?

    There is plenty of research on this matter. Granted, if we locked everybody up, we’d cut all crime outside of prison. But we’re locking up lots of people who aren’t or didn’t have to be hard-core criminals. The link between increased incarceration and lower crime isn’t clear. Even if it exists, it is inefficient.

    Professor Cassell goes on: “it would be a mistake to think that we can release any significant number of prisoners without increasing crime rates. One out of every 100 adults is behind bars because one out of every 100 adults has committed a serious criminal offense.” I don’t like Professor Cassell’s attitude.

    We willrelease virtually everybody in prison. The only question is when, and whether we’ll refill up the beds as quickly as we empty them.

    Economist Steven Levitt (Freakonomics), who promotesthe idea that increased incarceration lowers crime, estimates that the increase in prison population since 1990 accounts for only about 1/3rd of the crime drop. I don’t know if it’s worth it.

    Given the money it takes to lock somebody up, about $24,000 a year per person (and much more in New York), couldn’t we do something better with this money to prevent crime? Like hire more cops and pay them better?

    Others point out that economists’ number-crunching based logic is flawed. Some people are pretty bad and best behind bars. But most criminal work doesn’t disappear when somebody is locked up. Lock up a corner dealer and somebody else willfill the role. Locking up the “bad guys” won’t have any impact when all it does is create new “bad guys.” This is the drug market at work. While we can policeour way out of the crime problem, we can’t arrestour way out of it.

    The real factor is the war on drugs. Prison rates don’t (just) reflect crime and violence. They reflect our desire to incarcerate people.

    Our prison rate was more or less steady from 1900 until the war on the drugs at 100 per 100,000 people. This is a little high compared to other nations like ours, but in the same ballpark. Now it’s over 700 per 100,000. It is shocking.

    We’ve got more people behind bars than China. And they’ve got over four times the population. And we call them repressive. We’re so quick to see prison as the answer. We lock up people now we never would have locked up 35 years ago. Drunken drivers go to jail. My friend Bob just told me his neighbor got locked up for writing bad checks. She wouldn’t have been locked up in 1970. And just think, for the money we pay to lock her up, all her debts could have been paid off. What do you think the people she owed money to would have wanted? Why are we so willing to spend money to punish people but not to right wrongs?

    If one-in-a-hundred behind bars is so shocking, where is the shock for one-in-fifteen black men behind bars? And this doesn’t count the much larger figure of people on probation and parole. There are more black men in the criminal justice system today (jail, prison, probation, and parole) then there were black men enslaved in 1860.

  • Baltimore Bad Image Award

    I love Baltimore. I do. I hope my book makes Baltimore a better place to live and police. But one of my fears is that my book will just contribute to Baltimore’s image problem. I wish I could write a book that talks about the good food and good people and good neighborhoods of Charm City. But I didn’t. Instead I wrote a book about good police in a bad area.

    Slogans like Believe, The City That Reads, and Greatest City in America don’t seem to have much of an impact. My slogan: Baltimore–it means well. The next best slogan in undoubtedly John Waters’s: Baltimore–it’s shock you!.

    Anyway, I’m sure I’m missing some great contributers to Baltimore’s Bad Image. But anyway, here are my nominees for the 21st Century:

    The Baltimore Bad Image Award
    2000: Ray Lewis. Leads the Ravens to the Super Bowl. Lied to police about something he may have known about a murder investigation.
    2001: The Great Train Tunnel Fire. Burns for days. Cuts off the Northeast’s supply of concentrated orange juice (I don’t make this stuff up)
    2002: Darrell Brooks, firebombed the Dawson home, killed the whole family.
    2003: The Wire, Season 2
    2004: Ed Norris, former Police Commissioner (my police commissioner) goes to prison on felony charges.
    2005: Another season of the Wire
    2006: Ditto
    2007: Homicides increase to 282. This is the most since I was in the academy in 1999. Hopefully the “magic” 300 number will never be reached again.

    Here’s hoping Baltimore gets some good news in 2008.

  • But that’s my car!

    A witness at the trial of the officers who shot Sean Bell testified today. She was a topless dancer at the club. Leaving aside all the real issues, I noticed something most people probably missed from her testimony: this woman is no stranger to crime scenes.

    Put yourself in her shoes: You’ve just had a long night dancing, you’re leaving, you’re walking to your car when suddenly you see a man jump out of car and start shooting at another car. You dive behind some bushes, hear 50 shots in total, cars running into things, and no doubt there’s some screaming and yelling.

    What would you do? Probably not what Ms. Payne did. According to the Times:

    After two or three minutes, she ran back to her car so she could move it before the police arrived, but she was too late, arriving to see paramedics pulling bodies from Mr. Bell’s car.

    She’s right, too. If your car is on the wrong side when the crime-scene tape goes up, it’s going to be a long time before you get to move those wheels. If your car happens to have a bullet in it, it’s even worse.

    Such is one of the many petty frustrations of living in a high-crime neighborhood.

  • Police kill white people, too

    But you usually don’t hear about it. I call this the Al Sharpton effect. There is no white version of Al Sharpton.

    As the trial of the officers involved in the Sean Bell killing begins, I’ve been thinking more about police-involved shootings and race. Given media reports, it certainly seems like police only kill black people. But I know this isn’t true.

    I did a little research. According to the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports from 2000 to 2004, police-involved “justifiable homicides” kill about 350 people a year, 99 percent by shooting. [Update: That UCR data is horribly flawed. Some updated information starting here. And continuing here, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7. Also this post.]

    Virtually all police-involved killings, most for good reason, are categorized as justifiable. Of those killed by police, 32 percent are black and 64 percent are white. While the percentage of blacks killed is high compared with the black percentage in America (13%), it is low compared with other indicators of violence, such as the percentage of homicide victims and offenders believed to be African American (both 48%)

    Perhaps it is more useful to compare police-involved shootings with those killed by non-police officers. Among “justifiable homicides” by regular citizens—about 210 a year—African-Americans are 40 percent of those who kill and 56 percent of those killed. Compared with these numbers, police seem restrained in their use of force toward the black community.

    Of course the numbers do not tell us the race of innocentpeople killed. And numbers are no solace to the family of any victim of police bullets.

    Update (December 2014): Here’s a video of a black officer shooting an unarmed white person. (A disabled vet, for what it’s worth.) It happened in March, 2014. I didn’t hear about it till much later. Unarmed white people who get shot by police just do not become national news.

    Though horrible, and in hindsight wrong, I think the shooting was justifiable. Though not exactly a good shooting… but when that guy gets out of the pick-up truck and the long hard object goes up and into my face — and keep in mind I’m watching a youtube video and I *know* it’s not going to be a gun — I still felt my ass pucker.

    Would a reasonable officer have feared for his or life in that situation? Yeah, potentially, probably, I think so.

    It would have been great if the cop had known it was a cane. It also would have been great if the guy hadn’t gotten out of his truck on the highway and reached for his cane.

    A mistake. But I think a reasonable one. I’d let that cop off.

    And just in case you think this is the only unarmed white guy shot by police, here is a second case. Despite what some people think, it’s really not that rare for an unarmed white person to be killed by police.

    [Update: Here’s a 2014 post with racial data on cop killers and those killed by police.

    And in 2015 I discovered better non-UCR data.]

  • 911 Is a Joke

    Rapid response doesn’t work for police. I’ve published an article in Law Enforcement Executive Forum saying as much. It’s also a chapter in my book. I was reminded of the futility of 911 yesterday when I came across an old man who had fallen down and cracked his head open here where I’m visiting my parents in Santa Monica, California.

    I really don’t remember my medical first responder training from 8 years ago. But I still figure I’m better in such situations than most people. At least I can stay calm and not do anything incredibly stupid. Luckily, for the both me and the bleeding man, an off-duty firefighter was there who actually knew what he was doing (apply pressure to stop the bleeding and give the guy some basic tests to make sure he was with it).

    I fished the man’s wallet from his pocket to look for any medical warnings and check for ID (that’s the cop in me). Then there wasn’t much for me to do except watch the scene and wait for a cop or paramedic to turn the wallet over to (it would have been a little difficult for me to put the wallet back in his pocket and I didn’t want to bother the guy examining him… no, I didn’t take anything, but I couldn’t help but notice that his wallet was a lot thicker than mine).

    One woman made us aware of her presence by deciding that the bleeding man’s problem was the head wound, but the firefighter helping him. She yelled: “You way too much up in his face and need to step back and let the man breath! He can’t get no air! Step back!” She meant it, too, and seemed about ready to set things straight.

    Now that I’m a professor and not a cop, I’m so rarely reminded of complete, honest, and destructive stupidity! I was reminded how quickly a scene in the ghetto could get ugly with someone like her provoking a crowd. Luckily, this was a crowd on Santa Monica’s 3rd St. Promenade. It isn’t by a long stretch the hood. A few other people in the crowd kind of cut her off and blocked her out.

    Meanwhile others were trying to call 911 from their cells phones and nobody could get through. The entire L.A. County system was either overloaded or down. Luckily, some public security person (I think their main job is to harass the homeless) could radio directly for paramedics. The guy had bled some, but he was going to be OK.

    What surprised me wasn’t that people couldn’t get through to 911. I was surprised that they were surprised they couldn’t get through. We’ve been sold on the wonders and necessity of rapid response. But anybody who needs it knows the truth: 911 is a joke, most of all for police.

  • Criminal Justice Journalists

    One of the best resources to stay on top of current police and criminal-justice news is a daily email from Criminal Justice Journalists. They’re not exactly a secret, but most people don’t know about it and everybody should.

    Bookmark them or give them your email and they’ll send you one e-mail every weekday (and nothing else and no spam). You get the headline from various stories and beneath that the first paragraph and a link to the full story. It’s an essential part of my day, and not just because it gives the illusion I read every paper in the country.

    Here’s a sample of the headlines from Friday:

    February 15, 2008
    In This Issue
    — Prison Student Kills Six, Himself, At Northern Illinois University
    — Student Group Presses To Allow Self-Defense Guns On Campus
    — WA Crime Lab Director Quits After Charges Of Sloppy Work, Fraud
    — Houston To Offer $12,000 Cadet Bonus; Union Critical
    — Big Medical Group Seeks End Of Federal Marijuana Ban
    — Austin Sheriff Criticized For Letting Feds Set Up Office In Jail
    — N.C. Leaders Seek Funds To Pay For Sex Assault Victim Tests
    — Minneapolis Newspaper Finds 83 Sealed U.S. Criminal Court Cases
    — New Orleans Mayor Criticizes Media Over Gun Photo
    — Utah Police Seek To Block Public Access To Disciplinary Files
    — TV-Decency Group Protests CBS Show On Killer Forensic Expert
    — St. Louis-Area Chief Accused Of Deleting Database Arrest Record

  • A police perspective on cameras in squad cars

    Today’s Los Angeles TimesOpinion Section has an excellent article by an L.A. police officer about cameras in squad cars.

    I couldn’t have said it better myself, so I won’t. Here’s his piece:

    View from a squad carPutting video cameras in black-and-whites won’t clear up a distorted picture of the LAPD.
    By Jack Dunphy
    Los Angeles TimesFebruary 17, 2008

    The federal consent decree mandating reform of the Los Angeles Police Department was supposed to expire in 2006, five years after the city negotiated it with the U.S. Justice Department following the Rampart scandal. But in May 2006, the federal judge overseeing it ruled that the department was still not complying with several of its provisions and ordered that the court-appointed monitor keep watch over the department until June 2009.

    According to the Police Protective League — the police union — the city has already spent more than $13 million for the monitor’s fees and expenses and more than $30 million in complying with the decree’s many provisions.

    Now the Police Commission wants to spend more money to install digital video cameras in the LAPD’s fleet of patrol cars. Its members believe that the cameras, along with a computer database of every officer’s complete personnel information, will help satisfy the section of the consent decree that requires the department to “examine and identify officers demonstrating at-risk behavior,” such as using excessive force or displaying racial bias.

    Many police departments across the country have installed video cameras in their patrol cars. The images they capture have provided evidence in criminal cases and have helped prove or refute allegations of officer misconduct. The L.A. City Council is weighing several contract proposals for installing cameras in the LAPD’s black-and-whites.

    But many of us who work in the department are skeptical about how these video images will be used. And we have good reason to be. Consider: A recent internal audit of arrest reports concluded that a large number were unsatisfactory because they did not properly document whether Miranda warnings were given to suspects. On its surface, the finding suggested a dire problem. But a closer look at the audit revealed that there was hardly a problem at all. Department policy dictates that when a suspect under arrest has not been advised of his Miranda rights, the words “not admonished” must be written in a designated space on the arrest report. Some officers, however, used different words — such as “not advised” and “not given” — to report the same thing.

    No matter, said the auditors. Because these officers didn’t use the required language, they had to complete follow-up reports spelling out what any fool could have seen was clearly meant in their original reports.

    Now imagine the effect on police officers if this kind of obsessive punctiliousness were applied to the images captured by the video cameras installed in their patrol cars. It wouldn’t be long before officers reverted to the “drive-and-wave” mode of policing practiced during the tenure of former Police Chief Bernard C. Parks. Many officers regarded Parks as a heavy-handed disciplinarian, and rather than risk censure or punishment for breaking his rules, they backed off proactive policing. Total arrests declined 33% during his time as chief, and homicides jumped 41%.

    The LAPD manual is hundreds of pages long and contains thousands upon thousands of individual regulations governing every conceivable aspect of police operations. In addition, special orders, training bulletins and all manner of directives are annually issued about such activities as how to park police cars in a traffic stop and how to answer a telephone.

    If some auditor were to watch a video of me on any given day in the field, it wouldn’t take long before he would see me violate at least one of the orders. Police officers sometimes cut corners, not because they are corrupt or dishonest or lazy but because no set of rules and regulations, no matter how voluminous, can possibly address every situation they may confront on the streets. If you show me an officer who does things strictly by the book all day every day, I’ll show you one who doesn’t have much of an effect on crime.

    Compliance with the consent decree may be a worthy goal, but it should not come at the expense of fighting crime. If officers believe that their recorded actions in the field would be as rigorously scrutinized as were the arrest reports, they might be less inclined to risk their careers by being proactive.

    What’s disheartening to L.A. cops is that the need for reform seems the longest-running and most familiar narrative about their department. I’ve lived through many LAPD scandals during my career, including on-duty cops committing burglaries in Hollywood in 1981, the beating of Rodney King in 1991 and Rampart. These stories were exhaustively covered in this newspaper and in other media.

    But how many people will recognize the names of Steven Gajda, Filberto Cuesta and Brian Brown? These police officers were murdered doing their duty during the time former officer Rafael Perez and other cops were committing the crimes that led to the Rampart scandal and the consent decree.

    Randy Simmons, the SWAT officer killed Feb. 7 in a shootout in Winnetka, was laid to rest Friday. He has been justly praised in this newspaper and elsewhere not only for his on-duty valor but for his off-duty outreach to disadvantaged youngsters. But in a few days or weeks, he will likely be forgotten by all but those who knew him.

    But the word “Rampart” will live on and continue to evoke images of a police department gone bad. Sadly, putting cameras in patrol cars to record “at-risk behavior” by cops is unlikely to lift the stigma of scandal that wrongly plagues the LAPD.

    Jack Dunphy is the pseudonym of a Los Angeles police officer who writes a column for National Review Online.

    The article can be found on the LA Timeswebsite. They hold all copyrights.